Stoked vs Stoker - What's the difference?
stoked | stoker |
(stoke)
(slang) Feeling excitement or an exciting rush.
* 1964 , '', 3 December 1964. Quoted in Sidney J. Baker, ''The Australian Language , second edition, 1966, chapter XI, end of section 2, page 255.
A person who stokes, especially one on a steamship who stokes coal in the boilers
A device for stoking a fire; a poker
A device that feeds coal into a furnace etc automatically
A person who pedals on the back of a tandem bicycle
As a verb stoked
is past tense of stoke.As an adjective stoked
is feeling excitement or an exciting rush.As a noun stoker is
a person who stokes, especially one on a steamship who stokes coal in the boilers.stoked
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)- When you're driving hard and fast down the wall, with the soup curling behind yer, or doing this backside turn on a big one about to tube, it's just this feeling. Yer know, it leaves yer feeling stoked .
